Results 281 to 290 of about 710,685 (355)
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Strikes and Community Mental Health Services

Psychiatric Services, 1978
The author discusses the effects of a 17-day strike by mental health workers in Santa Clara County, California, in 1975. Staff walkouts were most complete in services that were considered essential: the four methadone clinics and a 62-bed locked inpatient unit for acutely ill involuntary patients.
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Community Mental Health Services in Britain

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1973
Although the practice of psychiatry was similar in the United States and Britain during the last century, since then their paths have diverged, especially since the Second World War and the institution in Britain of the National Health Service. The major postwar development in Britain has been in social psychiatry, with particular reference to ...
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Perceptions of the Community on the Pricing of Community Mental Health Services

Health Marketing Quarterly, 1992
In the past few years there has been a decrease in governmental support of Community Mental Health centers. Because of this, there has been some concern, on the part of Community Mental Health professionals, as to the overall impact of this decreased governmental support.
Denise T. Ogden, James R. Ogden
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Barriers to Community Mental Health Services for Latinos: Treatment Considerations

, 2006
The underutilization of mental health services by Latinos has been a growing concern in research and clinical practice. This has become increasingly important as the popu- lation of Latinos in the United States rapidly rises and the ev- idence that many ...
Haig Kouyoumdjian   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Mental Health Services for Chinese in a Community Health Center

Social Casework, 1984
Serious mental health problems exist within the Chinese population of the United States. This article describes one center's attempt to meet the psychiatric needs of both nonpsychotic and psychotic Chinese patients through bilingual, culturally relevant treatments.
May Kwan Lorenzo, David A. Adler
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Working together in adult community mental health services: Exploring inter-professional role relations

, 1999
This is the second of two papers in this issue of JMH that draws upon an initiative by the Centre for Mental Health Services Development (CMHSD) to examine problems of inter-professional working in adult community mental health services.
E. Peck, I. Norman
semanticscholar   +1 more source

PROJECTIONS FOR COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1966
As we have stressed in the training of our medical students, we ourselves must be prepared to practice whatever technique each patient requires. As we continue to deal with problems newly brought to us by the public, we must ask ourselves how much our new solutions are directed to patients' problems and how much to our need to resolve our own anxiety ...
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Working together in adult community mental health services: An inter-professional dialogue

, 1999
This paper draws upon an initiative by the Centre for Mental Health Services Development to establish a multi-professional dialogue between senior mental health care professionals in order to explore key problems of inter-professional working in adult ...
I. Norman, E. Peck
semanticscholar   +1 more source

User participation in community mental health services: exploring the experiences of users and professionals.

Scandinavian Journal of Caring Sciences, 2009
Increased user participation and community integration are central aims for contemporary mental health policy in many countries. User participation in community mental health services is developed through practice; from interaction between service-users ...
Toril Anne Elstad, A. Eide
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Community mental health services in transition

Community Mental Health Journal, 1987
Major policy and funding shifts over the last several years have stimulated a series of changes in local mental health agencies. Services offered CMHCs became less comprehensive and more oriented toward chronic and severely ill patients. Decreases occurred in other services, primarily indirect services.
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